Orlando Sentinel

Franchise exercises 5th-year option on DT Wilkins

- By David Furones

The Miami Dolphins don’t have a first-round pick in the NFL draft, but they secured their firstround­er from three years ago to remain with the team for at least another two seasons.

The Dolphins are exercising the fifth-year option for standout defensive lineman Christian Wilkins, the team announced Thursday morning.

The move, which had a Monday deadline to execute, likely assures the Dolphins will have their 2019 first-round pick in Miami through the 2023 season while they can still continue to work on a multi-year extension with Wilkins.

It was a decision that Dolphins general manager Chris Grier indicated was likely when he touched on the subject at the NFL Scouting Combine in March.

“He had a heck of a year last year,” said Grier when asked about the chances of picking up Wilkins’ fifth-year option. “I would say most likely, but we’ll make that decision when we get to that.”

In his third NFL season, Wilkins tied for the league lead in tackles among defensive linemen. His 89 tackles tied Pittsburgh’s Cameron Heyward for most last season, which was the highest mark for any down lineman since 2013. Ten of those tackles for Wilkins went for a loss.

Wilkins, starting every game, also reached new heights in his pass rush in 2021 with a careerhigh 4 ½ sacks, adding 13 quarterbac­k hits, four pass deflection­s, a forced fumble and fumble recovery — and that’s not to mention his touchdown reception with an epic celebratio­n that followed in a December win over the New York Jets.

The fifth-year option guarantees the former Clemson standout an estimated salary of roughly $10.75 million in 2023, a figure that is based on his playing time the past three years and the average salary of the third through 20th highest-paid defensive tackles.

A multi-year deal for Wilkins, who is slated to make $2.6 million in 2022, would likely earn him an annual salary in the $10-13 million range. The fifth-year option, which is only available for firstround picks, gives the Dolphins an extra season to get a deal done, but a multi-year extension would be more cap friendly.

Wilkins figures to be a key cog in a Dolphins defense that anchored the team’s run of winning eight of its last nine games in 2021. Miami returns all its starters and most of its contributo­rs from last year’s team. The Dolphins re-signed defensive end Emmanuel Ogbah, reached a lucrative extension with cornerback Xavien Howard and brought back a slew of linebacker­s — Elandon Roberts among them — to achieve that defensive continuity.

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